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The Brantley Enterprise, Nahunta, Ge., Thursday, March 24, 1944
Brantley Enterprise
Published weekly on Thursday at Nahunta, Georgia
Official Organ of Brantley County
Carl Broome Editor and Publisher
Mrs. Carl Broome Associate Editor
Second class postage paid at Nahunta, Ga.
Address all mail to Nahunta, Georgia
Lott Variety Store's
Pre-Easter Sale
RUG RIOT SALE ON Beautiful scatter Rugs
at only SI.OO each.
Reg. $2.98 Rugs — $1.98.
Reg. $3.98 Rugs at only $2.98.
Men's Famous Make T Shirts in Slight Irr. —
2 for SI.OO.
Men's Reg. SI.OO Orlon Socks —79 c.
Men's Slight Irr. Orlon Socks at 2 Pr. 88c.
They are scarce but we have them again —
Fiber Glass Drapes at fantastic savings in irreg
ulars.
Reg. $3.99 in first qual. but — 2 Prs. for
$5.00 in Sec.
48 X 84 inch Rayon Drapes in pretty pleats
2 pr. $5.00 — if firsts would be $7.00.
Reg. 79c Silicone Iron Board Covers 2 for
SI.OO
Ladies' Folding Slippers Reg. 69c now 49c.
Large Asst. Print & Check Material 3 Yds.
SI.OO.
Un-Bleached Muslin (It's Scarce) 4 Yds. SI.OO.
Woodburys 69c Press Powder or 69c Lip
stick 2 for SI.OO.
Woodburys $1.25 Dusting Powder or Hair
Spray SI.OO.
Dryad Deodorant; It's New, Reg. 59c Size
48c.
54-inch Osnaburg Material for Drapes 59c
yd.; not usually available in Variety stores.
Lott Variety Stores bring you outstanding
values. Shop our stores and compare price and
quality.
Jesup Tour
The Jesup Tour of Homes,
sponsored by the Wayne County
Garden Club Council, will be held
Sunday afternoon. March 27, from
2:00 to 5:30 P. M.
Homes and places to be visited
include:
Mr and Mrs. Roy Watson,
r ' ill
El
More than 5,000 commercial buildings in Geor
gia are now heated and cooled electrically. An
average of 80 new buildings are added to this
number every month.
Tenants enjoy ideal indoor climate when they
choose electricity. Customers, employees and
employers benefit.
Owners profit, too, because upkeep is simpli
fied. With clean, flameless electricity there are
no combustion by-products. Buildings stay new
looking longer. Redecorating costs are cut.
And builders save money. An electric system
eliminates all need for costly vents, boilers,
chimneys and flues.
If you’re building, buying or leasing, check
the facts. Then we think you will choose an
all-electric building, too-
GEORGIA POWER COMPANY
Route 2; Mr. and Mrs. Allen Pitt
man, South Sixth St.; Wayne State
Bank, S. Macon St.; playhouse
and garden, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Harper, E. Cherry St.; home and
garden, Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Mur
phy. S. Mahogany St.; Mr. and
Mrs. Randall Walker, Old Waynes
ville Rd.; and Mr. and Mrs. H. E.
Moody. Jr., Harper St.
PRACTICAL FAMILY LIVING
Learn to read and interpret
garment labels. This lesson will
be your biggest help in caring
for textile products.
All textile merchandise bears
a label giving the percentage of
each fiber, by family name, con
tained within the fabric. These
labels, with proper identification,
should be removed from a gar
ment and placed on a bulletin
board near the washing machine
or in a card file. Reference to
these labels when care is requir
ed is relatively simple.
There are two large groupings
of textile fibers. These are the
natural fibers and the man-made
or synthetic fibers. Within each
of these large groups of fibers
are families of fibers which pos
sess certain common properties.
The family name, often referred
to as the generic name, is the one
found on fabric and garment la
bels. By learning the care to be
given a family group, one will
know the basic care to be given
all the fibers in this family.
Some of the main fiber groups
and their requirements for care
are given below. When caring for
blends, give the fabric the care
required by the most sensitive
fiber. In any case, read labels
for specific instructions.
Cotton and Linen — Examine
garment before washing. Remove
oil and grease stains by spong
ing each spot with a cleaning sol
vent or by rubbing detergent
solution into stained areas with
fingers or brush. Rinse. Read
labels carefully for use of chlo
rine bleach on wash and wear
cottons. Chlorine bleach tends to
yellow and/or weaken some re
sin-treated wash and wear fa
brics. Sodium perborate bleach
is safe to use on all fabrics.
Silk — Silk is a luxury fabric
and should be treated with care.
Preferably it should be dry
cleaned. Before hand washing,
read labels carefully. If hand
washing is recommended, use
lukewarm, softened water with
a mild soap or detergent. Do not
use a chlorine bleach. Press with
a fairly cool iron (silk setting).
Let a professional dry cleaner
remove spots or stains.
Wool — Frequent brushing will
help keep the garment clean and
new looking. Dry cleaning is re
commended for most woolen gar
ments. For wool garments that
can be laundered, use lukewarm
water with a mild detergent and
agitate very gently for a short
time. Rinse well. Squeeze out ex
cess water, shape and dry flat.
Press with a steam iron on the
wrong side of the fabric, using a
press cloth for added protection.
Do not iron with dry heat.
Rayon — In some cases dry
cleaning is recommended. In
laundering, examine garment be
fore washing. Remove oil and
grease stains either by sponging
spots with a cleaning solvent or
by rubbing detergent solution in
to stained areas with fingers or
brush. Many rayon fabrics lose
stength when wet and need care
ful handling during laundering.
Rayons may be washed at any
temperature, dryer dried, damp
ened, and pressed either with a
medium hot iron (almost as hot
as for cotton) or a steam iron.
Fabrics made of glass fibers
should be handled carefully.
Launder by hand and avoid snag
ging fabric. Do not scrub or
wring. Drip dry. Do not dry clean
or wash by machine.
Acetate and Triacetate — Dry
cleaning may be recommended
because of finish, decoration, or
9 FILLING m
fpRESCRIPTIONSI
B IS OUR MOST
IMPORTANT SERVICE 0
Ernest Knight
DRUGGIST
The Rexall Store
Pharmacist Always on Duty
147 West Cherry Street
Phone GA 7-2254 Jesup, Ga.
At home or away
Kaopectate’
Kaopettate’
—
L ——
Dependable relief for
dierrhu. Mike tore
you ilweye have a bottle
handy...juat In caae.
Sherman D. Tomlinson
Pharmacist
Nahunta, Georgia
garment design. Garments made
of acetate should be hand wash
ed at a low temperature in mild
suds. Rinse thoroughly. Drip dry
or blot out excess moisture and
dry. Press while damp on the
wrong side with the iron at the
lowest setting.
Acrylic — In general, knitted
garments of acrylic are satisfac
torily cared for by washing. Wat
erborne stains wash out easily.
Oil or grease stains need spot
treatment before laundering. If
very hot water is used, it may
cause yellowing. Drip dry or dry
er dry with controlled heat. Use
low temperature in pressing.
Nylon — Oil or grease stains
need spot treatment before laund
ering. White or pastel nylons
should not be washed with color
ed or badly soiled garments. Ny
lons should be rinsed thoroughly.
A water softener in the first rinse
helps to remove detergent. To
brighten grayed or yellowed ny
lons, a commercial color remov
er may be used.
Olefin — Read labels for speci
fic care. Use a very low press
ing temperature.
Polyester — Waterborne stains
wash out easily. Oil or grease
stains need spot treatment before
laundering. White garments
should be washed only with other
white ones. Rinse thoroughly us-
FOR f ™
ONLY 1
lollm
r m
Moody Bros. Furniture Co.
Phone HO 2-2185, Nahunta, Ga.
WHY DO WE take such great pains to
achieve perfection in our services? Have
you considered that the Memory Picture of
any such service must stay forever in the
minds of those most concerned? It cannot
be retaken or retouched. In all humanity we
want it to be a picture which brings solace
. . . and finally peace.
CHAMBLESS FUNERAL HOME
Notice to Brantley
County Tax Payers
Make your state and county
tax returns by April 1.
Don't be confused by the work
being done by the Georgia Ap
praisal Company in regard to the
equalization program. The pro
gram will not go into effect until
1967.
I will appreciate your coopera
tion in getting your tax returns in
on time. Thank you.
John M. Wilson
Tax Commissioner, Brantley County
ing a water softener in the iirst
rinse. Drip dry or dryer dry
with controlled heat. If press
ing is necessary, iron at a low
setting or with a steam iron.
Spanoex — May be hand or ma
chine washed using warm but
not hot water. Do not use bleach
or detergents containing chlo
rine. Drip dry or dryer dry at
low temperature for 10 minutes.
—By Margie Mclntyre, Home
Economist-Clothing, Cooperative
Extension Service, University of
Georgia.
Tuten Opposes
School Lunch
Program Cutback
Congressman J. Russell Tuten
appeared before the House Sub
committee on Agricultural Appro
priations Monday and urged them
to restore proposed cutbacks in
school lunch and milk programs,
the Agricultural Conservation Pro
gram, the REA loan program^ and
the Cooperative Extension Service.
In earlier public statements, Tu
ten has stated he would oppose
the budgetary reductions both in
Committee and on the House
floor.
In his testimony before the Com
mittee, Tuten declared, “I feel
strongly that there are better
ways of saving sl9 million than
taking it out of our school child
ren’s lunches.”
PEACE OF MIND
Phone HO 2-3855
Nahunta, Ga.
Tuten went on to say that he
was equally opposed to the re
duction in the Agricultural Con
servation program fund from $220
million to SIOO million.
The Eighth District Representa
tive voiced further opposition to
limiting the REA Cooperative
Loans as well as the shift in funds
for the Cooperative Extension
Service from a formula alloca
tion to a "special projects” allo
cation.
Hunting Season
Information for
1966 Is Given
The spring Gobbler season will
be March 19-April 9. Bag limit
one (1) Turkey Gobbler in the
following counties: Screven, Bul
loch, Effingham, Evans, Tattnall,
Chatham, Bryan, Liberty, Long,
Mclntosh, Wayne, Glynn, Brant
ley, Camden, Charlton and Pierce.
The fall season for hunting tur
keys will be December 1— Janu
ary 5 in the above counties.
Deer season shall be October
29, 1966 through January 5, 1967.
Bag limit two (2) in the following
counties:
Screven, Bulloch, Effingham,
Tattnall, Evans, Chatham, Bryan,
Candler, Liberty, Long, Mclntosh,
Wayne, Glynn, Brantley, Camden,
Charlton, Burke, Washington,
Glascock, Jefferson, Jenkins, and
that portion of Emanuel county
lying north of U. S. 80; and that
portion of Pierce county lying
south of U. S. 82 and east of Ga.
121; and that portion of Echols
county lying east of U. S. 129 and
south of Ga. 187; and that portion
of Clinch county lying south of the
Atlantic Coast Rail line and east
of the run of the Suwannoochee
Creek. Hunting with dogs shall be
allowed.
Quail and Rabbit season will be
November 19, 1966, through Feb
ruary 28, 1967.
Squirrel season shall be October
15, 1966, through February 28,
1967.
No closed season on Raccoon in
south Georgia.
Trapping season for fox, o’pos
sum, muskrat, otter, mink, rac
coon, and skunk will be Novem
ber 19, 1966, through February 28,
1967.
A fried egg, sprinkled with
grated cheese, is delicious, says
Miss Nell Boyd, Extension home
economist - nutrition. If you are in
a hurry at breakfast time, try
making a banana milk or an
orange nog, using a blender. A
serving of bread may be used to
complete the menu.
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WrTT’ - _ I'M CALLING
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|i||7^ LOAN!
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This Spring, add the room, finish off the basement, or modernize
the kitchen. It will make living more fun and increase the value
of your home besides! (Our Home Improvement Loan experts
are available to give you good advice on this.)
If you have a bright idea for your house, we have the right
Home Improvement Loan to make it possible!
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ONKECA
The Citizens Bank
FOLKSTON AND NAHUNTA, GA.
Rural
j Electricr
i serve all of
Georgia by:
• Creating jobs, paying wages
... And our Members make up
a multimillion dollar market for
appliances and equipment to use
low-cost electricity . . .
I e Sharing the tax burden . . .
I Georgia's electric co-ops paid
I over $1,200,000 in 1965 State
I and County ad valorem taxes
I . . . paid all other taxes requir
| ed by law . . .
" • Strengthening the enonomy
I . . . With abundant electric
power, the farmer's productivity
has vastly increased . . . "Main
Streets" all over the state reflect
the increased rural purchasing
power . . . The "yardstick" ex
s ample we provide by service
helps to hold electric rates in
line for all consumers . . .
• Serving where needed . . .
With most of Rural Georgia elec
trified, our state is prepared to
enter fully into the era of growth
and progress that lies aheadl
• Creating jobs, paying wages
. . . And our Members make up
a multimillion dollar market for
appliances and equipment to use
low-cost electricity . . .
e Sharing the tax burden . . .
Georgia's electric co-ops paid
over $1,200,000 in 1965 State
and County ad valorem taxes
. . . paid all other taxes requir
ed by law . . .
e Strengthening the enonomy
. . . With abundant electric
power, the farmer's productivity
has vastly increased . . . "Main
Streets" all over the state reflect
the increased rural purchasing
power . . . The "yardstick" ex
ample we provide by service
helps to hold electric rates in
line for all consumers . . .
• Serving where needed . . .
With most of Rural Georgia elec
trified, our state is prepared to
enter fully into the era of growth
and progress that lies ahead!
OKEFENOKE
RURAL
MEMBERSHIP
COMMUNITY OWNED • COMMUNITY BUILT
• COMMUNITY BUILDE*
DOIT,
DOIT,
DOIT!
ELECTRIC
CORPORATION
MEMBER
F. D. I. C.